“
34 | New Scientist | 27 July 2019
Outsmart
yourself
To be fitter, healthier and wiser you often need to overrule the way your
brain is programmed. Here’s a scientific guide to gaming your mind and
achieving your goals – in spite of yourself. By Caroline Williams
and putting healthier options in their place.
Using smaller plates and glasses can also
reduce the amount we eat and drink in one
sitting. Muting adverts on the TV may help
stem the flood of bad ideas.
And if you are trying to lose weight or save
money, always eat before you shop – and not
just when getting food. Research suggests
that shopping hungry is a sure-fire way to
spend more than you intended.
Remember your future self
“Shark sighted today. Enter water at your
own risk.”
As warning signs go, it is persuasive.
The possibility of being bitten or killed
is enough to put anyone off a swim.
But, let’s get real: sharks killed five people
in 2018. About 3.2 million deaths every year
are attributed to inactivity. So why do we find
adverts warning of the perils of a sedentary
lifestyle, like ones admonishing us to get off
the “killer sofa”, less scary?
Simple, says Huda Akil, a neuroscientist at
the University of Michigan. Our brains are
wired to prioritise present, certain risks over
something that may happen further in the
future. “Immediate response to threat is very
strongly wired in all organisms, as it is essential
to survival,” she says. Longer-term threats are
less obvious, so don’t kick off a stress response.
Features Cover story
Change your surroundings
We like to think we are creatures of reason and
purpose. In reality, we mostly sleepwalk our
way through life, responding to whatever is
under our noses. “Environments cue our
behaviour – often without our awareness,” says
Theresa Marteau, director of the Behaviour
and Health Research Unit at the University of
Cambridge. Worse, the environment often has
a stronger influence on our behaviour than
the beliefs we hold in our heads.
This is a problem, because, like it or not,
we live in an environment that encourages a
sedentary lifestyle packed with calories and
adverts that put cravings into our heads. Most
of the time we don’t even know that we are
acting on them. According to one study, adults
mindlessly drink 1.5 glasses more booze after
seeing people drinking on TV. And adults
and children alike snaffle more snacks after
watching food-based adverts.
Ads are only a part of the problem. Our
routines become automatic programs that
run without any conscious input: reaching
for a biscuit to go with a cup of coffee, or a beer
when you get home from work, for example.
These kinds of habits are tough to break, so
your best bet is to make them more difficult
to unthinkingly enact.
Marteau says that the only environment
we really have control over is the home, so
start there – perhaps by ridding the kitchen
cupboard of high-calorie snacks and booze,
J
UST do it,” they say. If only it
were that easy. It doesn’t seem
to matter how much you want to
get fit, eat better, spend money more
wisely or work towards a promotion,
something always comes along to
knock you off course.
The good news is that it doesn’t
make you a bad person, it just makes
you human. The human mind didn’t
evolve to love exercising and eating
veg. The reality of the hunter-
gatherer life that shaped us was
that exercise was non-negotiable
and if you found something sweet,
fatty and edible, resistance was an
option – just not a very sensible one.
As for sitting still and concentrating
for hours on end, forget it. Our
minds were shaped to scan the
horizon for danger and opportunity.
Unfortunately, this means that
most of our long-term goals work
against what our bodies and minds
have evolved to do. So, what’s a
modern human to do? The only
thing for it is to game your brain.
So here are the most scientific ways
to do just that and reach your goals,
in spite of yourself.